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CHAPTER FOUR Stream flow measurement

Engineering Hydrology (ECIV 4323). CHAPTER FOUR Stream flow measurement. Instructor: Dr. Yunes Mogheir 2015. 4.1 Introduction. Surface water hydrology deals with the movement of water a long earth’s surface as a result of precipitation and snow melt

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CHAPTER FOUR Stream flow measurement

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  1. Engineering Hydrology (ECIV 4323) CHAPTER FOURStream flow measurement Instructor: Dr. Yunes Mogheir 2015

  2. 4.1 Introduction • Surface water hydrology deals with the movement of water a long earth’s surface as a result of precipitation and snow melt • Knowledge of quantity and quality of stream flow is a request of municipal, industrial, agricultural and other water supply projects. • The water flowing in stream is measured as discharge of water with a unit of volume (m3/sec, cubic of feet per second – cfs)

  3. Stream Measurements • 1) Direct measurement of stream • Area-velocity methods • Dilution techniques • Electromagnetic methods • Ultrasonic method • 2) Indirect measurement of stream • Hydraulic structure such as weir, flumes and gated structure • Slope area method

  4. 4.2 Measurement of Stage - Direct measurement of discharge is a very time-consuming and costly procedure. Two steps are followed: 1- the stage of the stream ( elevation of water surface above a datum) is measured by many methods such as staff Gauge, wire gauge, automatic stage recorder…. etc. the results is stage hydrograph (Figure 4.7). 2- The discharge is related with the stage in well known stage-discharge relationship (rating curve)

  5. rating curve

  6. 4.3 Measurement of Velocity(Horizontal Axes Meter)

  7. 4.4 Area-velocity method (direct method) • Figure 4.14 and Example 4.1 • Velocity is measured at 0.6 of the depth • For the first and last sections • For the rest of segment

  8. 4.4 Area-velocity method (direct method) • Figure 4.14 and Example 4.1

  9. 4.4 Area-velocity method (direct method)

  10. 4.4 Area-velocity method (direct method)

  11. 4.8 indirect method • Make use of the relation between the discharge and the flow discharge and the depths at specified locations. • Flow measuring structures (weirs, flume…etc) • Slope area methods • For flow measuring structures the discharge Q is a function of the water-surface elevation measured at specified location • Q=f(H)

  12. 4.8 indirect methodSlope- Area method • The Manning equation • Where • Q = discharge (m3/s) • n = Manning’s roughness coefficient (range between 0.01 and 0.75) • A = cross-section area (m2) • R = the hydraulic radius, equal to the area divided by the wetted perimeter (m) • S = the head loss per unit length of the channel, approximated by the channel slope R=A/P P = witted parameter

  13. See Figure 4.21 • Applying energy equation to section 1 and 2 • Z1+Y1+V12/(2g)= Z2+Y2+V22/(2g)+hl • h1 = Z1+Y1 • h2 = Z2+Y2 • hl (head losses) = he + hf

  14. he = eddy loss • hf = frictional losses •  h1+ V12/(2g)= h2+ V22/(2g)+ he + hf • he = ke|V12/(2g)-V22/(2g)| • ke = eddy loss coefficient • hf = (h1- h2)+(V12/(2g)- V22/(2g)-he

  15. 4.8 indirect methodSlope- Area method For uniform coefficient • L= length of the section • hf/L = Sf = energy slope = Q2/k2 • k = conveyance of the channel = 1/n A R2/3 • where n is manning roughness coefficient • K = (K1K2)0.5 for different cross sections A1 and A2 For non-uniform flow • an average conveyance is used for hf/L = Sf = energy slope = Q2/k2 • where previous equation and continuity equation can be used to estimate discharge Q (known value of h, cross-section properties and n) • Q=A1V1=A2V2

  16. Procedure (tries and errors) • Assumed v1=v2 • Calculate Q by using Q = k S0.5 • Compute v1 = Q1A1 v2 = Q2A2 • Refine the value of h2 and then repeat step 2 until Q or hf were very close (see Example 4.3)

  17. Example 4.3

  18. 4.9 Stage Discharge Relationship • Measuring the discharge in direct method requires two steps: • Measuring the stage (G) and discharge. • Prepare a stage discharge (rating curve) • For a gauging section of the channel, the measured values of discharge are plotted against the corresponding stages. • The flow can be control by G-Q curve when: • G-Q is constant with time (permanent) • G-Q is vary with time (shifting control)

  19. Permanent control • Most of streams and rivers follow the permanent type and the G-Q curve can be represented by: • Q = stream discharge • G = gauge height • a = a constant of stage at zero discharge • Cr & B = rating constants • See Figure 4.22 a and b

  20. Permanent control • Straight lines is drown in logarithmic plot for (G-Q) • Then Cr & B can be determined by the least square error method • For the best fit of N. observation, by regression analysis (use excel or other programs) or eq. 4.28 (a&b) • r correlation coefficient is 1 for perfect fit • 0.6 – 1 can be considered as good correlation

  21. Stage for zero discharge (a) • It is hypothetical parameter and can’t be measured Method 1 • Plot Q vs. G on arithmetic scale • Draw the best fit curve • Select the value of (a) where Q = 0 • Use (a) value and verify wither the data at log(Q) vs. log(G-a) indicate a straight line • Trial and error find acceptable value of (a)

  22. Stage for zero discharge (a) Method 2 (Running’s Method) • Plot Q&G on arithmetic scale and select the best fit curve • Select three points (A,B and C) as • Draw vertical lines from (A,B and C) and horizontal lines from (B and C) • Two straight lines ED and BA intersect at F • See figure 4.23

  23. Stage for zero discharge (a)

  24. Stage for zero discharge (a) • Method 3 (eq. 4.30) • See example 4.4

  25. Shifting controls (optional) Change of stage discharge with time due to: • the changing characteristics of channel • aggradations or degradation of alluvial channel • variable backwater effect (the gauging section) • unsteady flow effects (rapidly change stage) For 1 & 2 it is recommended to update rating curves frequently For 3 & 4 shifting control is recommended

  26. Backwater effect The same stage will indicate different discharges • The backwater effect can be removed by - Secondary (auxiliary) gauge is installed in the downstream of the gauging section and the two readings is taken • F1 & F2 F1-F2=F (fall) Q=f(G,F) • Q/Q0=(F/F0)m • F0 is normalized value (average) • Q0 is normalized value (average) • F0 and Q0 selected from observation • See figure 4.25

  27. Backwater effect 2. Draw constant fall curve • Q0 vs. G for constant F0 3. Calculate Q/Q0 and F/F0 and plot ( adjustment curve ) 4. both constant and adjustment curve can be refined by trail error (the best curve fit) How to use them • For G1 and F1 use adjust curve to get Q/Q0 • For G1 use constant fall curve to get Q0 then actual discharge is (Q1/Q0 )kQ0 See figure 4.26

  28. Unsteady flow effect • Due to flood waves in gauging section, the stage-discharge relationship for unsteady flow will not be a single valued relationship but it will be a looped curve as in figure 4.27

  29. Unsteady flow effect • Qn = normal discharge at steady uniform flow • Qm = actual measured for unsteady flow • S0 = Chanel slope • dh/dt = rate of change of stage (field data) • Vw = velocity of flow wave (=1.4 V) where V is the average velocity estimated by manning formula • Qm/Qn is calculated based on the value of dh/dt

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